| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This is a first step towards the Secure Shared Memory (SSM)
infrastructure for Ouroboros, which will allow proper resource
separation for non-privileged processes.
This replaces the rdrbuff (random-deletion ring buffer) PoC allocator
with a sharded slab allocator for the packet buffer pool to avoid the
head-of-line blocking behaviour of the rdrb and reduce lock contention
in multi-process scenarios. Each size class contains multiple
independent shards, allowing parallel allocations without blocking.
- Configurable shard count per size class (default: 4, set via
SSM_POOL_SHARDS in CMake). The configured number of blocks are
spread over the number of shards. As an example:
SSM_POOL_512_BLOCKS = 768 blocks total
These 768 blocks are shared among 4 shards
(not 768 × 4 = 3072 blocks)
- Lazy block distribution: all blocks initially reside in shard 0
and naturally migrate to process-local shards upon first
allocation and subsequent free operations
- Fallback with work stealing: processes attempt allocation from
their local shard (pid % SSM_POOL_SHARDS) first, then steal
from other shards if local is exhausted, eliminating
fragmentation while maintaining low contention
- Round-robin condvar signaling: blocking allocations cycle
through all shard condition variables to ensure fairness
- Blocks freed to allocator's shard: uses allocator_pid to
determine target shard, enabling natural load balancing as
process allocation patterns stabilize over time
Maintains existing robust mutex semantics including EOWNERDEAD
handling for dead process recovery. Internal structures exposed in
ssm.h for testing purposes. Adds some tests (pool_test,
pool_sharding_test.c. etc) verifying lazy distribution, migration,
fallback stealing, and multiprocess behavior.
Updates the ring buffer (rbuff) to use relaxed/acquire/release
ordering on atomic indices. The ring buffer requires the (robust)
mutex to ensure cross-structure synchronization between pool buffer
writes and ring buffer index publication.
Signed-off-by: Dimitri Staessens <dimitri@ouroboros.rocks>
Signed-off-by: Sander Vrijders <sander@ouroboros.rocks>
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Implement forward-secret key rotation using HKDF key derivation. The
operation is based on QUIC RFC 9001 and wireguard.
Keys rotate every 2^KEY_ROTATION_BIT packets, with the current phase
(P) signaled via controlling a bit in the IV (bit 7, first bit on the
wire). Default 20 (1M packets).
The wire format, after the DT header is:
[ P | random IV ][ encrypted blob ][ AEAD tag ]
Works with and without retransmission, and the FRCT header is fully
contained in the encrypted blob if used.
The receiver detects phase changes and rotates accordingly, keeping
the previous key valid during a grace period. This handles packet
reordering in unreliable flows: the 3/4 period protection window
prevents premature rotation when late packets arrive, while the
1/2 period grace window ensures the old key remains available for
decryption.
Signed-off-by: Dimitri Staessens <dimitri@ouroboros.rocks>
Signed-off-by: Sander Vrijders <sander@ouroboros.rocks>
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The "lockless" rbuff was mixing paradigms as it still has mutexes and
condvars to avoid spinning on blocking behaviour. This was a bad
idea. We'll add proper lockless implementations later.
Signed-off-by: Dimitri Staessens <dimitri@ouroboros.rocks>
Signed-off-by: Sander Vrijders <sander@ouroboros.rocks>
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This moves the CMake build logic out of the source tree and splits it
up into a more modular form. The tests now have a CMakeLists.txt file
in their respective source directory.
Signed-off-by: Dimitri Staessens <dimitri@ouroboros.rocks>
Signed-off-by: Sander Vrijders <sander@ouroboros.rocks>
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